LABYRINTHS AND PATH OF THUNDER: Poetry

LABYRINTHS AND PATH OF THUNDER: Poetry


Author(s): Christopher Okigbo
Edited By Christopher Okigbo

Purchase: EURO $14.95

Type: Book
Language: English
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: N/A
Content:: Non Academic
Source: African World Press
Timeline: The Contemporary Age - From 1789 to 2011
Published: 2019

Description

“There is nothing in Nigerian poetry and little in any poetry I know to surpass the haunting beauty, the mystic resonance and clarity of the final movements of the protagonist’s quest in “Distances”.

 

--Chinua Achebe,

Don’t let Him die, 1978

 

Labyrinths is an interlinked volume of poems. Christopher Okigbo was an extraordinarily gifted poet who died in 1967 during the civil war in Nigeria. It is his only published volume of poems, a meditation on everything from our origins to our obscure destinies; it is autobiographical; and it’s a piercing lament on war. I think of him as our Lorca. He belongs to that class of poet who brings out one work and that work is a world. It says everything he needed to say in his lifetime. It should be read by everyone in every country. I can’t think of him without the shadow of tears in my heart.”

 

--Ben Okri,

Observer, 2007 London

 

“Christopher Okigbo is the most loved of African poets. The evidence may be seen in Chinua Achebe and Dubem Okafor’s commemoratory volume in which poets, painters, soldiers, professors, and various contemporaries offer their tributes of undying affection. The painters opened the floodgates with Obiora Udechuckwu’s British council exhibition in 1977. And following Wole Soyinka’s austere “For Christopher Okigbo”, almost every book of African verse in English has carried its garland of flowers.”

 

--Ben Obumselu

Christopher Okigbo: A Poet’s identity

 

“Prophetic, Menacing, terrorist, violent, protesting- his poetry was all of these”

 

--S.O.Anozie

Creative Rhetoric (1972)

 

“Okigbo’s verse fills our minds like a half forgotten tune returning to memory”

 

--Ulli Beier

Black Orpheus XI (1962)

 

“…The inclusion of this documentary heritage in the memory of the world register reflects its exceptional value and signifies that it should be protected for the benefit of all humanity”

 

--Kichoro Matsauura

Director-General, UNESCO (June 2007)

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

CHRISTOPHER IFEKANDU OKIGBO was born in Ojoto, in eastern Nigeria on August 1932, and died in 1967 while fighting as a commissioned Biafran army officer during the Nigerian civil war. He studied at the legendary University College Ibadan together with the other two giants of modern African literature: Chinua Achebe and Wole Soyinka.

 

An outstanding personality, Okigbo aspired to venture beyond the boundaries imposed by cultural, political, artistic, creative and humane limits. In the years following his tragic death, Okigbo has emerged as clearly the most significant and influential African poet, a reputation that rests on a rather slim but irresistibly powerful oeuvre as well as a penetrating and uncompromising intellect.

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